Posts Tagged “Kenworth”

Spud Truck Hits Road with Heart-Health Message for Women

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SpudTkBOISE, Idaho – The head-turning, jaw-dropping Great Big Idaho® Potato Truck is back on the road for its third consecutive cross-country tour with a new message for women: Take care of your heart! The five-month long, 2014 Big Idaho® Potato Truck Tour kicked off in Boise, Idaho with waves, cheers, and hugs from the students of Riverside Elementary School and salutes from soldiers at the Air Force Base in Mountain Home.
In 2011, fresh Idaho® potatoes were certified by the American Heart Association’s Heart-Check Food Certification Program by meeting the program’s nutrition requirements and they now bear the highly recognized and respected Heart-Check mark on the packaging. This recognition is profoundly helpful in reminding consumers that Idaho® potatoes can be a part of their everyday diet. Knowing that heart disease is the No. 1 killer of women (mothers, sisters, daughters, friends) and is more deadly than all forms of cancer combined, it’s more important than ever that women understand the role both diet and exercise play in achieving a healthy lifestyle.
“The Idaho Potato Commission’s (IPC) support of the American Heart Association’s Go Red For Women movement provides another new and exciting way we can remind consumers, especially women, of the nutritional benefits Idaho® potatoes offer,” said Frank Muir, President and CEO, IPC. “In addition to a new charity beneficiary, we’ve rebranded the Truck so it showcases fresh Idaho® potatoes prepared in various ways and creatively communicates the potato’s nutritional benefits.”
“The American Heart Association’s Go Red For Women movement is grateful to the Idaho Potato Commission for supporting us in our fight against heart disease in women,” said Bernie Dennis, Chairman, American Heart Association National Board of Directors. “This is an exciting opportunity for the Idaho Potato Commission to help educate consumers on ways they can prevent heart disease through diet and exercise.”

In 2014, the truck will visit 26 states and travel close to 19,000 miles during a five-month period. The Truck and its seasoned traveling Tater Team will stop at high traffic events like the Kentucky Derby, the Art Car Parade and Festival in Houston, Texas and the 55th World Lumberjack Competition in Hayward, Wisconsin. In between events, the Truck will visit key retailers and foodservice operators, and local places of interest it finds along the way.
The Truck The Great Big Idaho® Potato weighs more than 6 tons (the equivalent of 32,346 medium-sized Idaho® potatoes). It has become a traveling ambassador for the country’s most famous potato. After being seen by hundreds of millions of Americans in person and in the IPC’s national television commercial, the most frequently asked question is, “Is it real?” We’ll never tell… but in the event it is, the Great Big Idaho® Potato:

  • Would take more than 10,000 years to grow.
  • Is 1,102 times heavier than the largest potato ever grown, which weighed 11 pounds.
  • Would take 2 years and 9 months to bake.

The Great Big Idaho® Potato Truck was created and built by Chris Schofield and Sharolyn Spruce of Weiser, Idaho. With the help of a few specialized contractors, they spent an entire year designing and building this incredible vehicle. The Kenworth Sales Company and Western Trailer, both based in Boise, Idaho, also aided with the construction.
The Tour To find out when the Great Big Idaho Potato Truck will be in a city near you, please visit www.bigidahopotato.com. The website provides in-depth information about the Truck, the IPC’s support of the Go Red For Women movement and weekly updates with tales and photos from the road.

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Driver Lee Weaver: An Ambassador for Trucking and Eating Healthy Fruits and Veggies

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TkrLeeWeaverIf you are a produce association, produce grower or shipper, or anyone else in the fresh produce industry looking for ways to market and promote your products, there may not be anyone better than this trucker, who has been a professional driver for over a quarter of a century, and hauls nothing but fresh fruits and vegetables.

Meet Lee Weaver, a driver for Alan DoBorde of Fayettville, GA.

Lee has logged over two million accident free miles during his career, and still runs about 100,00o miles a year.

The company driver not only is proud of his profession, but takes pride in the fact he is delivering such healthy, nutritious fresh food.

“I like hauling produce even though it sometimes can be a hassle,” he notes.  “But you are picking up fresh fruit and you are delivering fresh fruit.  I am being partly responsible for families having fresh produce on their tables at home.  I am making a difference.”

Lee drives a beautiful red 2013 Kenworth powered by a 500 hp Cummins. He pulls a 53-foot Utility trailer with a Thermo King SB-210.  His sleeper has all the amenities ranging from a refrigerator to microwave oven and flatscreen tv.

A resident of Roanoke, AL, Lee has a regular run originating in Georgia, where he pick ups produce.  He’ll then truck to Texas, then over to Louisiana and up to Arkansas, before heading west to Los Angeles.  After delivering and picking up in Southern Calfiornia, Lee heads back to either Georgia or Florida.

Lee has never owned his own truck and has no desire to take on the headaches associated with being an owner operator.  At the same time he likes being an over-the-road driver, which pretty much allows him to be his own boss.

“You have to be responsible,” he says, “Plus you are not in the same place everyday.  You are getting paid to see the world.”

A concern being on the road is the lack of attention to driving by so many motorists.  It is a primary reason for accidents.  Paying attention while driving is one reason this long haul truck has an impeccable driving record, covering so many miles over such a long period of time.

 

 

 

 

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Dale Hunt: American Hero as a Navy SEAL – and a Trucker

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DSCN2147Dale Hunt of Milwaukee, WI has no doubt lived an interesting life – but perhaps  the most interesting adventures he has lived will never be known.  After all, the former owner operator and now company driver, who used to be a Navy SEAL, will never talk about it.

As he said to me with a slight smile on his face, “If I told you anything I’d have to kill you.”   I look at the Navy SEAL ballcap he is wearing and the SEAL sticker on his truck and reply,  “let’s move on to another topic.”

Although the roots for Navy SEALS dates back to WWII, the group as it is known today was formed in 1962.  The SEALS mission is to conduct counter guerilla warfare and clandestine operations in maritime and riverine environments.  In other words, these are “bad” dudes doing brave and good things.

But Dale’s life these days appears more normal as a driver for Maglio & Co. of Milwaukee, a wholesaler and processor primarily for foodservice companies.  Dale delivers produce mostly to Maglio customers.

He has been trucking 30 years, including 12 years as a Navy SEAL and five years as an owner operator.

Dale has been driving for his current company for two years and he sees advantages whether being an owner operator or a company driver.  Right now he prefers being the latter, considering the weak state of the nation’s economy.

The company delivers freight to eight states stretching from Ohio to North Dakota.  Although some of the firm’s drivers have no regular places they deliver, he has a regular route which brings him into North Dakota.

The Wisconsinite may be away from home as much as five days, but normally he is away from home closer to two days at a time.

Dale drives a 2013 Kenworth powered by a 435 h.p. Cummins diesel, and 10-speed Eaton transmission.  He pulls a 53-foot Utility trailer with Thermo King SB-230 reefer unit.

He likes trucking because if you are an owner operator, you are your own boss, and even if you are a driver the freedom is still “sort of like being your own boss.”

“There is a demand for good drivers,” Dale says.  But it is a demanding job dealing with all the traffic, etc.  But it’s a good profession to be in, if you are dedicated.  It’s makes it a lot easier if you like what your are doing.”

Dale has dealt with demanding work most of his life, and what could be more demanding than a professional Navy SEAL?

— Bill Martin

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Owner Operator Mark Baumann: Women, Trucks & Big Fleets

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DSCN1454When it comes to women and trucks, owner operator Mark Baumann has found if you treat your truck right, it will never let you down.  Women are another matter.  He also has a few issues with the large carriers, but one matter at a time.

On this particular day a few weeks in Chicago, it was a  bright sunny day.  Although he’d driven through some rain storms the night before, his 2005 Peterbilt still looked sharp, even though it needed a bath.

I’d love to see this rig at night with its 300 lights shining!

“My mom always said be seen, not heard,” Mark recalls.  “Life has been good to me, but like anything else it has had its ups and downs.  I’ve made a lot of money, but I’ve lost a lot of money.”

Mark hauls cheese under a lease to Wisconsin Refrigerated Express LLC out of  Sheboygan, WI.  Those loads are usually destined to Texas.  On the return haul he’ll pick up fresh produce grown in South Texas or Mexico, which he delivers to the Anthony Marano Co. in Chicago.  The large midwest produce distributor will unload him, and fill his truck with more produce for delivery to Wisconsin supermarkets.

He purchased his 379 Pete new in 2005 for $115,000 and has since logged nearly 1.3 million miles.  It is powered by a C-15 Cat, 18-speed transmission with 3:55 rears.  The rig features a fuel enhancing Pittsburgh box by HBA, allowing him to average 5 mpg, which he says is similar to one produced by Bully Dog.

He also owns a 2004 Great Dane, 48-food trailer with a Thermo King Whisper, a reefer unit known for its quietness and fuel efficency.

Mark loves his Pete and states if someone offered him what he paid for it new, he’d walk away from the offer.

“You can find a good woman anywhere.  Women come and go, but a good truck is hard to come by,” states the 47-year-old trucker from Plymouth, WI.  “That ole girl (Pete) will be with me til the day I die.  She’ll do whatever I want, if I ask her nicely.”

He adds, “I always haul produce and cheese.  Trucking is in my blood.  Once it is there, you can’t get rid of it.”

Mark says he spends $2,800 a week on fuel.  Although “that’s a good chunk of money, I’m making good money.”

However, like most successful owner operators, making money comes with a price.  He is consistently logging about 3,400 miles per week and spends little time at home.

“I’m the guy they call when they say a job can’t be done,” he states.

Mark has been trucking 16 years and says it is the independent truckers that have built this industry; the small fleet owner with four or five trucks.  However, he says it is becoming more difficult to compete with the rate slashing big fleets.

He also is critical of the new drivers hitting the highways for the large carriers, saying many have inadquate training before being put behind the wheel of a big rig.

“A lot of bad things can happen with lack of enough training.  They train them for three weeks, give them a new Kenworth and tell them to the head to California.  You can replace a rig, but you can’t replace a life,” he observes.

 

 

 

 

 

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Troy Pecka: Small Fleet Owner Still Loves the Business

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Troy Pecka has been in the trucking business for nearly a quarter of a century and has pretty much seen it all, or at least come fairly close to it.  There is something to be said for someone who started out trucking out as a 19-year-old, and now owns his own small fleet at the “ripe” old age of 43.

The owner of Troy Pecka Trucking Inc. doesn’t have the time to get behind  the wheel of a big rig anymore as much as he’d like, in part because he’s dealing with all the rules and regulations to keep the drivers of his 15 trucks and three leased owner operators doing what they do best – truck.

Troy is following in the footsteps of his dad who started trucking at age 18 and didn’t stop until his was 76.

Troy’s small fleet, based in East Grand Forks, MN, specializes in hauling a lot of loads of frozen foods and fresh red potatoes to the Southwestern and Southeastern USA.  Return trips lean heavily towards mixed fresh produce going into Edmonton, Alberta.

When asked what rules and regulations in trucking he disliked most, Troy would not commit to any particular ones.  “All of these things increase your cost of operation,” he notes.

There could be the refusal of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) to delete inspection reports from a driver’s record, even after that driver is found not guilty by the courts.

Or how about the FMCSA’s flawed enforcement program in CSA’s Safety Management Systems.  There have been reports of safe drivers being listed as unsafe in the system.

Another example, could be the Federal highway legislation passed last July.   It calls for the FMCSA to  require electric on-board recorders (EOBRs) in all heavy duty trucks.  Many in trucking are concerned it will lead to driver harrasment by authorities.  This could involve electronic recording of a driver’s hours of service, vehicle location (through a GPS), with information available to law enforcement.

It is examples such as these which makes it more difficult to get good qualified drivers.  He says the older drivers are leaving the industry and there are not nearly enough young drivers coming on board.  After all, long haul trucking certainly is not an 8 to 5  job.

Despite all the government red tape, Troy still  enjoys the business.  He just doesn’t have the time to truck as much as he used to, although taking command of one of his big rigs to someplace like Fargo isn’t out of the question.

“I just can’t get it (driving) out of my blood,” he states.

One of his favorite trucks (pictured) is a 2007 red conventional Kenworth.  It houses a 475 hp Caterpillar diesel, riding on a 260-inch wheelbase with a 13-speed transmission.  He also like the 72- sleeper featuring all the amenities.  It pulls a 53-foot Utility trailer housing a Thermo King reefer unit.

 

 

 

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Big Idaho Potato Truck is Touring the USA

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A huge Idaho potato on a flat-bed truck is once again hitting the road this year as part of the Idaho Potato Commission’s (IPC) television advertising campaign.

The Kenworth is pulling a giant tator that weighs 12,130 pounds, which the IPC claims equals 32,346 medium sized potatoes.

Additionally, the famous fitness guru  Denise Austin will once again be the celebrity spokesperson for Idaho potatoes.

The  IPC big Idaho potato truck, on its seven-month national tour will conclude its trip just in time for the Produce Marketing Association’s (PMA)annual convention and trade show in Anaheim, CA late October.

The IPC’s new ad campaign premiered on national television on ESPN during the recent Boise State vs. Michigan State game (MSU won 17-13).

The IPC ad program will be on national cable television beginning in mid-October” and continuing through February. the campaign will be carried on a variety of news programs such ase CNN and FOX News, as well as the Food Network, The Cooking Channel, HGTV, and The History Chanel among others.

By the end of the tour, the truck will have travelled over 15,000 miles, visited some 150 cities in 35 states across the country

In other activities, Denise Austin “will be doing two different public service radio announcements” for the commission.

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Duane Riendeau: Makes a Good Living Hauling Produce

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If you want to make it in trucking, you should take some pointers from a real veteran, Duane Riendeau.  Although he’s now a company driver, for most of his career he was a successful owner operator.

He’s still running over the road, but he takes off a couple of months each year, raised five kids, and still enjoys what he is doing.

The resident of Grand Forks, ND  began trucking at age 26.  Until seven years ago when he became a driver for Troy Pecka Inc. of East Grand Forks, MN, he was an owner operator.  Now 65, Duane doesn’t want to work as hard, pretty much selects his hauls, and still does his share of trucking.  Yet, he usually takes off around January and February each year and relaxes in Arizona.

“I owned a truck for 25 years.  I really enjoyed it.  I paid for every truck I bought and I can’t complain.  I had five boys and one girl and most of them went to college.  I don’t have a lot of money left, but I accomplished that anyway,” he says in a modest, soft spoken voice.

“All my kids are grown and they are doing pretty darned good,” he says.  The only kid involved in trucking is a son with a couple of trucks that run locally for a business his son owns.

So how does a guy raise give kids, vacation two months year and pretty much set his own driving schedule?

Duane says if you are a produce trucker, you have got to be “connected” and “be careful because a lot of people are out there who won’t pay.”  For the young, inexperienced persons entering trucking he suggests relying on the credit and rating services such as the Blue Book and the Red Book.  These will give one a good idea of how reputable a company is and show their pay practices. 

“When it comes to rejected loads or claims, you sometimes learn as you go.  I look my loads over when I’m being loaded.  You can telll when the produce is fresh, or if it is ‘iffy’.”

When it is “iffy” with quality or appearance concerns, Duane stresses the need to tell your customer about its condition.  It is better the load be “kicked” by the buyer at the loading dock than after you have delivered it to the customer.  The shipper may not like what the trucker is telling the customer, but that shipper will also realize the product isn’t what it should be.

Duane says there are a lot of good trucking companies to work for, but that Troy Pecka was an independent trucker himself, plus his father and brother were in trucking.

“Troy understands the whole business.  I go (on hauls) when I want to go with his truck, just like it was my own.  All he expects is that the truck makes money.  There are five or six guys my age that work for him and he wouldn’t have it any other way.  He knows when you leave with a load it is going to get there,” Duane says.

Duane actually leased his own truck to Troy Pecka Trucking for four years, before selling it and becoming a company driver.

He is now driving a 2007 Kenworth T-600 with a C-13 Cat engine with 475 h.p., pulling a Great Dane trailer.

Duane has nothing but praise for the Great Dane, saying “you pay for what you get.”  He cites the Dane’s heavy insallation and sturdy floors, noting some cheaper brands of trailers “are throw aways” because they are not built as well.

“I haul quite a bit of produce,” Duane relates.  “I’ve hauled everything you can possibly imagine.  We do haul some frozen items.  I haul a lot of raw (fresh) potatoes out of the Red River Valley.”  However, he also hauls everything from watermelons to lettuce, cabbage and other vegetables and citrus out of South Texas.

“I’ve always hauled a lot of produce and always made a living at it,” he states. 

That’s pretty obvious, having raised five good children and vacationing in Arizona during part of the winter.

 

 

 

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Big Idaho Potato Truck Arrives in Atlanta

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Atlanta, GA – As part of its cross-country tour, the Great Big Idaho® Potato Truck spent a few days enjoying the southern hospitality in Atlanta, Ga. One of its first stops was the Atlanta Food Truck Park on 1850 Howell Mill Road. Lunchtime visitors had an opportunity to view this “spudtacular” vehicle and four local Meals On Wheels agencies received a total of 350,000 servings of Idahoan Mashed Potatoes, ready-to-serve, dehydrated potato products.

The Idaho Potato Commission built the truck, a larger-than-life version of the vintage Idaho potato postcard, in celebration of its milestone 75th Anniversary. Weighing in at six tons (the equivalent of 32,346 medium-sized Idaho® potatoes), the Great Big Idaho® Potato is traversing the country to greet fans and to help raise funds and awareness for the Meals On Wheels Association of America (MOWAA), the oldest and largest national organization dedicated to helping end senior hunger.

“Idaho® potatoes generate more than $4 billion dollars in revenue annually and employ more than 30,000 people. Agriculture and potatoes in particular are the primary reasons Idaho is among the most fiscally sound states in the nation,” explained Frank Muir, president and CEO, IPC.

The Great Big Idaho® Potato Truck made its national debut at the Famous Idaho® Potato Bowl in Boise, Idaho last December when ESPN prominently featured it several times during the game. Since then, the Truck has made several public appearances and at every venue, the most frequently asked question is: “Is it real?”  We’ll never tell, but consider that the Great Big Idaho® Potato…

* Would take more than 10,000 years to grow.
* Is 1,102 times heavier than the largest potato ever grown, which weighed 11 pounds.
* Would take two years and nine months to bake.
* Could make 30,325 servings of mashed potatoes and more than 1.4 million (1,455,570) average-sized fries!

The Great Big Idaho® Potato Truck was created and built by Chris Schofield and Sharolyn Spruce of Weiser, Idaho. With the help of a few specialized contractors, they spent an entire year designing and building this incredible vehicle. The Kenworth Sales Company and Western Trailer, both based in Boise, Idaho, also aided with the construction.

To find out when the Great Big Idaho® Potato Truck will be in a city near you, please visit www.bigidahopotato.com.  The website provides in-depth information about the Truck, the IPC’s partnership with MOWAA and is updated regularly with tales and photos from the road.

Source: Idaho Potato Commission

 

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Produce Industry Should Get Its Act Together

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Tod Taylor has been trucking off and on for over 25 years, but it’s the onlyprofession he’s known for the past seven years.  He has pretty much done and seen it all during his career and is thankful the equipment has improved immensely.

He still has vivid memories of his first job trucking  in January 1986 when he was driving for a company with a 1982 cabover.  “They left me in New York City for three weeks, mainly to pick up and drop trailers.  I vowed I’d never go back there,” he recalls.

He hasn’t strayed much from those feelings today.  A company driver for Professional Services Transportation Inc. (PSI) of Huntsville, MO, Tod says he refuses to drive inside of Interstate 287 in New York.   He, as well as PSI pretty much also avoids trucking in California because of the rules, regulations and gridlock.

“You can’t make any time in California or New York.  You are dealing with too many things that eat the clock up,” he states.

While hauling meat is the primary focus for PSI, the company also transports its share of fresh produce.  In fact, he finds some similarities between the two categories of loads.

Tod had just hauled a load of meat from Milwaukee and made two drops inAtlanta.  Now he was parked at an Atlanta truck stop and in 14 hours (3 a.m.) was scheduled to make his first of three more drops.  Sounds a little like some produce hauls, in which he also aired some opinions.

“If the produce people would get their act together, it wouldn’t be bad (hauling fresh fruits and vegetables).   You wait three days to pick up two skids.  You wait for those skids because the product has to be harvested.  Trucking just don’t pay enough to do that.  When I get lucky and finally get loaded, then they don’t want to pay you anything to haul it,” he reflects.

Tod believes a minumum of two dollars per mile is needed to haul produce out of California and many other places, “but most guys aren’t getting that.  They want you to drive 3,100 miles for $2,800.  You can’t do that, especially when you are there three to four days waiting for a load.  It’s not worth it.”

At age 50, Tod has never owned his own truck, although he has considered it from time to time.  However, he has always decided against being an owner operator “because I don’t need all of the extra headaches.”

Tod drives a beautiful 2012 Kenworth T-660, which had only 37,000 miles on it.  He loves the truck that is powered by a Paacar 455 h.p. engine, 15-speed automatic transmission, and pulls a 53-foot Great Dane holding a Carrier refrigeration unit.  The truck is a light oak leaf color with an 84-inch studio sleeper.  The cab has a lot of modern features including a GPS system built into the dash.

He concludes, “Trucking has come along way from that ’82 cabover freight shaker I used to drive.”

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Mizzou Driver: Produce Folks, Get Your Act Together

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Tod Taylor has been trucking off and on for over 25 years, but it’s the only profession he’s known for the past seven years.  He has pretty much done and seen it all during his career and is thankful the equipment has improved immensely.

He still has vivid memories of his first job trucking  in January 1986 when he was driving for a company with a 1982 cabover.  “They left me in New York City for three weeks, mainly to pick up and drop trailers.  I vowed I’d never go back there,” he recalls.

He hasn’t strayed much from those feelings today.  A company driver for Professional Services Transportation Inc. (PSI) of Huntsville, MO, Tod says he refuses to drive inside of Interstate 287 in New York.   He, as well as PSI pretty much also avoids trucking in California because of the rules, regulations and gridlock.

“You can’t make any time in California or New York.  You are dealing with too many things that eat the clock up,” he states.

While hauling meat is the primary focus for PSI, the company also transports its share of fresh produce.  In fact, he finds some similarities between the two categories of loads.

Tod had just hauled a load of meat from Milwaukee and made two drops in Atlanta.  Now he was parked at an Atlanta truck stop and in 14 hours (3 a.m.) was scheduled to make his first of three more drops.  Sounds a little like some produce hauls, in which he also aired some opinions.

“If the produce people would get their act together, it wouldn’t be bad (hauling fresh fruits and vegetables).   You wait three days to pick up two skids.  You wait for those skids because the product has to be harvested.  Trucking just don’t pay enough to do that.  When I get lucky and finally get loaded, then they don’t want to pay you anything to haul it,” he reflects.

Tod believes a minumum of two dollars per mile is needed to haul produce out of California and many other places, “but most guys aren’t getting that.  They want you to drive 3,100 miles for $2,800.  You can’t do that, especially when you are there three to four days waiting for a load.  It’s not worth it.”

At age 50, Tod has never owned his own truck, although he has considered it from time to time.  However, he has always decided against being an owner operator “because I don’t need all of the extra headaches.”

Tod drives a beautiful 2012 Kenworth T-660, which had only 37,000 miles on it.  He loves the truck that is powered by a Paacar 455 h.p. engine, 15-speed automatic transmission, and pulls a 53-foot Great Dane holding a Carrier refrigeration unit.  The truck is a light oak leaf color with an 84-inch studio sleeper.  The cab has a lot of modern features including a GPS system built into the dash.

He concludes, “Trucking has come along way from that ’82 cabover freight shaker I used to drive.”

 

 

 

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